 
 Tips of the Week is our weekly peek at some of the best making tips, tricks, and recommendations we’ve discovered in our travels. Check in every Friday to see what we’ve discovered. And we want to hear from you. Please share your tips, shortcuts, best practices, and tall shop tales in the comments below and we might use your tip in a future column.
Crayon Wood Finish?

Hammers in the Kitchen

Stencil-Making App

Testing Tolerances in 3DP

Harbor Freight Tool Recommendations
I just discovered the channel, Real Tool Reviews. On it, Daniel does serious, in-depth reviews of tools and product vs. product shoot-outs. In a number of videos, he takes a hard look at Harbor Freight tools to discover which ones are actually great values. Two items that he recommends are the U.S. General 5-drawer mechanics cart (which can be had with coupon for as little as $190) and the Braun Slim Bar LED Light (as low as $20 with coupon). Both tools are covered in this video. I was already interested in the tool cart. I think he sold me on both.
Wheel Barrow Recliner

[From my new book, Make: Tips and Tales from the Workshop]
ALWAYS GIVE YOUR BOARDS A BATH
When you first get into electronics, it seems counter-intuitive to expose your circuits to cleaning solutions, but cleaning your PCBs should always be part of your circuit-building regimen. And you want to clean the board before and after you populate it. Make: contributor Ross Hershberger writes, “Cleanliness is next to solderliness. Freshly scrubbed copper takes solder with less heat and wets more thoroughly, so always scrub or otherwise de-oxidize your boards before soldering. I use isopropyl alcohol and a fine abrasive like a Scotch Brite. You can also use a pen eraser followed by alcohol. For bad corrosion, use a glass fiber ‘pen.’ Steel wool may leave fibers that can cause shorts.” [RH][Watercolor by Richard Sheppard]
*** If you get a copy of my book, please take a picture of yourself holding it, tag me, and use the hashtag #tipsandtales. Besides being a book about tips, this is also a book about the human side of tools and how they’re used. Tips and Tales itself is a tool, so I’d like to see the humans who are using it.
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